Category Archives: Comics
Hench-Sized Comic Book Reviews – 9/7/13
Welcome to Villains Month! It’s the two-year anniversary of DC’s New 52 reboot, and like every September so far, they have launched a wacky publicity stunt! Unfortunately for DC, I only bought two of the dozen or so villain books. And I wasn’t all that impressed with either one. Fortunately, I liked the first issue of Forever Evil a bit more, so at least DC has that.
Not to be outdone, Marvel Comics isn’t taking Villains Month lying down. They are neck deep in the big Infinity event (yawn), and this week also saw the launch of Battle of the Atom (yay), the new Brian Michael Bendis-penned X-Men crossover. So this week was clearly a huge week in comics – and not just because it’s my 30th birthday too.
Comic Book of the Week goes to both Battle of the Atom #1 and All-New X-Men #16. Marvel and Bendis kicked off Battle of the Atom in style, and I think it’s easily going to be the best Big Event Crossover of the season!
Comic Reviews: Battle of the Atom #1, All-New X-Men #16, Bizarro #1, Deadshot #1, Forever Evil #1, Infinity #2, and Superior Foes of Spider-Man #3.
Punishing Dick Grayson, and Why It Could Be a Good Thing
Dick Grayson can’t seem to catch a break. And I don’t just mean the murder of his parents when he was still a boy. I mean Dick Grayson as a comic book superhero can’t seem to catch a break in DC Comics’ New 52 universe. In less than two years, Dick found out that his childhood home, Haley’s Circus, was actually a front for the villainous Court of Owls secret society, and that Dick himself was in line to become one of their undead assassins (until the whole Batman and Robin thing happened instead). Then he found out his childhood sweetheart was a psychopath who betrayed him and tried to kill him, only for her to then be murdered by the Joker as a means of punishing Dick.
Then when he inherited Haley’s Circus and sunk all of his life savings into fixing it up, that too was destroyed by the Joker. Then Dick found out that Batman was keeping secrets from him, leading to an angry split between the two heroes. Then he found out the man who murdered his parents was still alive and hiding in Chicago!
And now Nightwing has been chosen as the sacrificial lamb for the new Forever Evil event.
Don’t worry, he’s not dead…at least not yet.
But something almost as huge happened to Nightwing in this week’s Forever Evil #1. As a big Robin and Nightwing fan, I’m worried about any major change to one of my favorite characters. But I’m here to tell you that this change might not be all that bad. In fact, this could work out very well in Nightwing’s favor.
As long as DC manages to use it to tell some good stories. That part is questionable.
But this isn’t the end of the world. Join me after the jump for full SPOILERS and why I think this could be good for the character.
DC Comics Doesn’t Want Batwoman to Get Married
News of further DC Comics editorial interference has hit the Internet today, and it hits hard. J.H. Williams III, possibly the most brilliant artist working in comics today, has announced that he’s leaving the critically acclaimed Batwoman series because DC won’t let him marry Batwoman and her fiancee, Maggie Sawyer, among other reasons. And that is just monstrous. Batwoman is the only comic from the Big Two publishers to star an openly gay character, and has even won two GLAAD awards for its portrayal of gay characters. Yet this is the stance DC is apparently taking.
Williams clarified on Twitter that DC isn’t necessarily opposed to gay marriage. They simply told him Batwoman and Maggie can’t get married. Considering what DC did to Superman and Lois Lane, they might just be opposed to any of their characters being married. But forbidding these two in particular from tying the knot is a horrible move.
Williams made the announcement on his blog last night. He said his final issue will be #26 in a few months. Both he and co-writer W. Haden Blackman will be leaving the title.
Here is an exert from Williams and Blackman’s letter explaining their departure:
Unfortunately, in recent months, DC has asked us to alter or completely discard many long-standing storylines in ways that we feel compromise the character and the series. We were told to ditch plans for Killer Croc’s origins; forced to drastically alter the original ending of our current arc, which would have defined Batwoman’s heroic future in bold new ways; and, most crushingly, prohibited from ever showing Kate and Maggie actually getting married. All of these editorial decisions came at the last minute, and always after a year or more of planning and plotting on our end.
We’ve always understood that, as much as we love the character, Batwoman ultimately belongs to DC. However, the eleventh-hour nature of these changes left us frustrated and angry — because they prevent us from telling the best stories we can. So, after a lot of soul-searching, we’ve decided to leave the book after Issue 26.
You can read the full text here. Or if that link is still broken, you can check it out here.
This is horrible news. Batwoman has been one of the consistently great books coming out of DC since the New 52, and the romance between Batwoman and Maggie Sawyer has been an absolute treat to read. It’s one of my favorite relationships in all of comics these days, and that marriage proposal was one of the most romantic comic book scenes I have ever read! I want to see this couple soar, and marriage seemed exactly where it was leading.
I would have loved a nice, romantic, heartfelt wedding between Kate Kane and Maggie Sawyer. But DC apparently had to be twerps about it.
Williams later clarified on Twitter: “Not wanting to be inflammatory, only factual – We fought to get them engaged, but were told emphatically no marriage can result.”
He also Tweeted: “But must clarify – was never put to us as being anti-gay marriage.”
So I think what we’re looking at here is DC just doesn’t want any of their characters to be married. They broke up Superman and Lois Lane in the reboot, along with Barry Allen and Iris West. Ralph and Sue Dibny are nowhere to be seen. The only character I can think of who is married at all is Aquaman. Why does he get a pass?
Because he’s written by Geoff Johns, obviously.
This news is just depressing. Batwoman is one of DC’s best books, and the relationship between Batwoman and Maggie Sawyer is one of the best and sweetest romances in all of comics.. Williams and Blackman have created something wonderful between those two characters, whereas DC can’t seem to get their heads out of their asses long enough to make Superman and Wonder Woman anything more than a PR stunt.
This is far from the first time DC has been taken to task by its creators for poor editorial management. DC has gone through half a dozen Superman writers in less than two years because of creative interference from the higher-ups. They had a huge marketing push when writer Andy Diggle took over Action Comics, but Diggle walked off the series before his fist issue even hit the stands. Rob Liefeld left the company in a flurry of laughs and accusations. And one of the new writers of the Green Lantern franchise dropped out before the work even started.
But this one might be the worst. Williams’ art is like nothing else in comics, and it made Batwoman a true standout. His creative direction on Batwoman has been nothing short of brilliant (except for that one, non-linear story arc).
This is a true shame.
Review: X-Factor #262
It is with a heavy but triumphant heart that I begin this review of the final issue of X-Factor. Though really, this is more than just a review, this is also a farewell, saying a final goodbye to my favorite comic book series of the past eight years, and goodbye to my favorite comic book character – Multiple Man – who is given a send-off in grand style by writer Peter David. Don’t worry, comic book friends, I will spoil that Jamie Madrox does not die at the end of his series. Nor does he go off into that sweet limbo stuck in demon form, as I had so feared. Instead, Peter David goes out with class, and sends Madrox off into the sunset. Fine show.
It’s my 30th birthday tomorrow, and I have yet to decide if the final issue of X-Factor coming out in the same week is simple coincidence or a harsh sign of growing up.
Comic Rating: 8/10 – Very Good.
I have been luke warm about these final issues so far. Some of them were good, like Wolfbane’s, providing a solid, touching goodbye for the character. Others, like Polaris’ and Monet’s aren’t really endings at all. Some of them have explored the character’s time with X-Factor in meaningful ways. Others were just spontaneous adventures. In the end, I suppose I liked them all, the same way I’ve always liked X-Factor, even when it wasn’t very good. My favorite chapter of The End of X-Factor arc would have to be this issue, saying goodbye to Madrox and his wife Layla Miller. PAD ties up a few loose ends and teases his next upcoming project, but he doesn’t do anything too drastic or crazy. We don’t find out the secret of Multiple Man’s powers, nor does Layla ‘know’ one final, insane thing.
Instead, PAD spends some time with Layla and the Demon Madrox, putting their situation into perspective and finding a fun, clever way to resolve it. There was at least one surprise in this issue that I did not see coming, and it made me smile. As did the ending. I liked this issue for its heart and its love of character. This isn’t a big, raucous goodbye or a massive superhero fight to the death. Instead, it’s a quiet, classy bow out, and I definitely approve.
Join me after the jump for a full synopsis and a glorious goodbye to X-Factor.
6 Comics DC Should Add to the New 52
DC Comics has a comic book problem. Anything that doesn’t have ‘Batman’ in the title isn’t selling, and DC has really been cracking down on comics that aren’t selling. Of the 52 comics that debuted at the start of the reboot in September 2011, more than 20 have since been cancelled in less than 2 years. DC immediately filled the gaps with new comics, but half a dozen of those have also been cancelled. DC’s pool of unique and different comics is dwindling rapidly. We no longer have series like The Savage Hawkman, Firestorm: The Nuclear Man, Blue Beetle, Static Shock, or comics for newer characters like Grifter and Voodoo. And while anyone can argue that Batman sells and Hawkman does not, I contend that there is no such thing as a bad character, only bad writers. And bad editors/publishers, as the case may be.
But for example, Hawkeye is probably the best comic book Marvel is publishing these days, and it stars Hawkeye! Are you telling me the same can’t be done for Hawkman?
DC doesn’t seem willing to give their comics a chance to find their voice or improve, and so we’re losing some potentially interesting characters to the back issue bins. DC continue to try new ideas, like Sword of Sorcery or The Movement, but they’re not willing to give new comics more than a handful of issues to be successful. Nowadays, it’s like they’re just throwing ideas against a wall to see what sticks. They’ve also stopped announcing new comics in waves. Now we get random announcements for comics like Harley Quinn or Justice League of Canada. DC is in trouble…so here I come to save the day with six suggestions that I think might sell!
Or maybe they’re just comics I want to read…Join me after the jump!





